Libraries at Cambridge University and UC San Diego Embark on Partnership to Broaden Awareness and Use of East Asian Collections

UC San Diego’s University Librarian Erik Mitchell, Sally WongAvery of the Avery-Tsui Foundation and Cambridge University Librarian Jessica Gardner at the signing ceremony.

The University of California San Diego Library and Cambridge University Library have launched a multi-year partnership that aims to broaden the awareness, access, and use of the extensive East Asian collections held by the two institutions.

On Tuesday, June 20, 2023, representatives from both universities — including Cambridge University Librarian Jessica Gardner and UC San Diego’s Audrey Geisel University Library Erik Mitchell — convened at Cambridge University Library for a signing ceremony to commemorate the official commencement of the WongAvery East Asian Collections Collaboration between Cambridge University Library and UC San Diego Library. Avery-Tsui Foundation Chair Sally T. WongAvery was in attendance.

With the sponsorship of the Avery-Tsui Foundation, the two universities will foster interlibrary collaboration, initiate and support research visits by scholars seeking to use the respective collections, as well as create and promote activities that highlight the collections and expertise held within the libraries.

“By coming together and collaborating on this endeavor, we will not only amplify the reach of these world-renowned collections of East Asian materials, but we will also celebrate the rich history of Chinese language and culture across the centuries,” said Cambridge University Librarian Jessica Gardner.

The collections at each institution are unique and complement one another.

The Chinese collection of Cambridge University Library is among the finest of its kind outside China. The first Chinese book “Dan xi xin fa fu yu” — an odd fascicle of a Chinese medical treatise — entered the library as early as 1632, part of a gift from the then Duke of Buckingham. The oldest items in Chinese collections are Chinese inscribed oracle bones dating from the 12th-14th century BC, and the oldest printed book is a Chinese Buddhist sutra dated 1107.

Cambridge University Library established the first substantial holdings of Chinese books after the donation of 4,304 volumes by Sir Thomas Wade (1818–1895) — the university’s first Professor of Chinese from 1888 until his death — who invented the Wade-Giles system which once served as a standard romanization system for Chinese.

Significant additions to Cambridge Library’s Chinese holdings came in the years immediately following the Second World War. An important bequest was received in 1952 by the will of L. C. Hopkins (1854-1952), comprising his celebrated collection of over 800 Chinese inscribed oracle bones.

UC San Diego’s holdings focus on more recent history and contemporary Chinese collections, such as the Chinese Cultural Revolution Posters Collection, the Chinese village research archive, the Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars Friendship Delegations Digital Collection, and the Chinese Independent Films Collection

“Through the spirit of collaboration and connection, we will highlight these incredible collections, from past to present, encouraging scholarship and better access for all across the globe,” said Audrey Geisel University Librarian Erik Mitchell. “At the end of the three-year partnership, our goal is to have broadened the visibility and reach of both our collections; supported and encouraged new scholarship; and constructed the foundations for a long-term collaboration between our two institutions that will benefit our global community.”

About Cambridge University Library’s Chinese Collections

The strengths of the Chinese collections at Cambridge lie in traditional culture, history, literature and the arts. Of late, more attention has also been paid to modern history and politics.

The Chinese collections at Cambridge now comprise about half a million individual titles, including monographs, reprinted materials such as manuscripts from Dunhuang, Huizhou, etc., archival documents and epigraphical rubbings, and 3,500 Chinese microfilm reels. Over 400,000 titles are included in some 2,000 cong shu, and about 3,000 Chinese printed serial titles are held in Cambridge libraries.

Explore these Chinese Collections and more on the Cambridge Digital Library. 

About UC San Diego Library’s East Asian Collections

Established in 1987, the East Asia Collection at UC San Diego focuses on collecting modern and contemporary Chinese, Japanese and Korean (CJK) language materials in the humanities and social sciences, including literature, history, sociology, linguistics, art, film studies, philosophy, economy business, political science and international relations pertaining to each region. With more than 200,000 print volumes, 1.2 million digital titles, 19,000 visual images and 3,000 films, the collection is recognized as a regional and national resource center for researchers and students in the field of East Asia area studies.

In 2020, UC San Diego Foundation trustee and alumna Sally T. WongAvery ’75 established the Sally T. WongAvery Collection of Chinese Materials with the donation of a complete collection of Chinese News — the first Chinese language newspaper published in San Diego, California.

She went on to establish the Sally T. WongAvery Fund for East Asian Collections with an initial gift of $10 million to ensure that East Asian scholarship and collections are a key part of the Library in perpetuity. This donation is among the largest dedicated library endowments to East Asian scholarship in North America.

In recognition of her philanthropy, UC San Diego renamed its Biomedical Library the Sally T. WongAvery Library in 2022.

The Natasha Wong Endowment for East Asian Collections was established in 2022 to honor her mother and further build the Sally T. WongAvery Fund for East Asian Collections. This endowment supports the UC San Diego Library’s East Asian collections, research and scholarly activities. Natasha Wong is Vice Chair of the Avery-Tsui Foundation.